Tuesday, April 15, 2014

In a paper discussing ontogeny in the neck vertebrae of diplodocids, Woodruff and Fowler (2012) questioned the validity of Suuwassea emilieae and its placement in Dicraeosauridae. For example, they noted that several characters used to place the genus in Dicraeosauridae (tall cervical neural spines and an anterior prominence at the dentary symphysis) are either symplesiomorphic or also found in the juvenile specimen MOR 592 (referred to Amphicoelias sp. by Wilson and Smith 1996). Moreover, the lack of scapulocoracoidal fusion, the slight bifurcation of the cervical neural spines, and the elongation of the foot bones are used by the authors to point to the immature growth status of ANSP 21122. Therefore, Woodruff and Fowler concluded that Suuwassea might be a possible juvenile form of one of other diplodocoids from the Late Jurassic Morrison Formation.Although ontogeny could explain some of the non-diplodocid characters in Suuwassea, it is important to note several things. First, the postparietal foramen used to place Suuwassea in Dicraeosauridae is also found in the diplodocine diplodocid Kaatedocus siberi (Tschopp and Mateus 2013) and the indeterminate flagellicaudatan braincase MB.R.2387 (Remes 2009). Other putative dicraeosaurid synapomorphies of Suuwassea listed by Whitlock (2011) (sharp sagittal crest on supraoccipital) are also present in Kaatedocus. Given the diplodocid placement of Kaatedocus and the uncertain status of MB.R.2387 within Flagellicaudata, the presence of a postparietal foramen in both Suuwassea and Kaatedocus appears to be a case of convergent evolution because, as pointed by Tschopp and Mateus, the diplodocid Diplodocusskull CM 11255 lacks such a foramen and Suuwassea and Dicraeosaurus have a postparietal foramen smaller than that of Kaatedocus and MB.R.2387.Even if the holotype of Suuwassea were subadult, it would still be a distinct species judging from available evidence above. It may take future discoveries to confirm or refute the hypothesis by Woodruff and Fowler (2012) regarding the validity of Suuwassea.Update: The landmark revision of Morrison diplodocid alpha-taxonomy by Tschopp et al. (2015) indicates that some putative dicraeosaurid characters of Suuwassea (postparietal foramen, sharp sagittal crest on supraoccipital) are also found in the diplodocid Galeamopus, but recovers Suuwassea as dicraeosaurid.

Emanuel Tschopp & Octávio Mateus, 2013. The skull and neck of a new flagellicaudatan sauropod from the Morrison Formation and its implication for the evolution and ontogeny of diplodocid dinosaurs. Journal of Systematic Palaeontology11 (7): 853-888, DOI: 10.1080/14772019.2012.746589